Mandated Health Care: Issues and Strategies
By (Author) Donald L. Westerfield
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Praeger Publishers Inc
30th April 1991
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
362.10973
Hardback
224
As medical insurance costs continue to increase, so do the numbers of Americans who carry no health insurance. This situation, exacerbated by federal budgetary pressures, has stepped up the conflict among all those who have a stake in health benefits: the government, employers, insurers, health providers, and citizens who need affordable health care. Westerfield examines the dilemmas behind the conflict over mandated health care, the strategies employed, and the costs--both social and economic--that must ultimately be borne. In Part I, the author looks at the impact of existing health care legislation and the vigorously debated issues surrounding the allocation of benefits to specific groups or for specific needs. Part II focuses on the conflicting goals of those who must pay for health care, those who provide it, and those who receive it. The final part begins by addressing major areas of health care, such as AIDS, chemical dependency, child care, and mental health care. Describing the strategies and counterstrategies in the struggle over benefits and costs, the author stresses that it is those most in need--the underclass and the underemployed--who are in danger of becoming the ultimate losers in the battle. This book clarifies and brings a constructive perspective to bear on an issue of concern to a large professional audience as well as to special interest groups representing health care consumers.
Westerfield covers the legislative background of mandated health insurance programs: their cost, their impact on employment, strategies for managing mandated benefits, and alternatives to them....This is the only book written on the topic of mandated health benefits and it should be of interest to practitioners as well as to those concerned with health policy issues.-Choice
"Westerfield covers the legislative background of mandated health insurance programs: their cost, their impact on employment, strategies for managing mandated benefits, and alternatives to them....This is the only book written on the topic of mandated health benefits and it should be of interest to practitioners as well as to those concerned with health policy issues."-Choice
DR. DONALD L. WESTERFIELD is Professor in the Graduate School of Webster University in St. Louis. He has just completed a forthcoming book from Praeger, The AIDS Conspiracy. Dr. Westerfield is on the editorial boards of The Journal of Economics and Finance and the Journal of Business and Economic Perspectives.